A fairing element to fair an elongate element comprising a canal to accept the elongate object and being profiled in such a way as to reduce the hydrodynamic drag of the elongate object when the elongate object is at least partially immersed, the fairing element comprises a leading edge and a trailing edge, the fairing element being intended to be pivot-mounted on the elongate element around the longitudinal axis of the canal, the fairing element comprising a bearing edge comprising a first bearing edge which is mitered with respect to the leading edge, the first bearing edge being arranged in such a way that the distance between the leading edge and the bearing edge, considered perpendicular to the leading edge, decreases continuously, along an axis parallel to the leading edge, from a first end of the first bearing edge to a second end of the bearing edge, the fairing element being referred to as a mitered fairing element, the mitered fairing element comprising a first part and a second part which are joined together along a first bearing edge so that the fairing element can pass from a deployed configuration in which the trailing edge is parallel to the leading edge to a folded configuration in which the fairing element is folded along the first bearing edge.
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1. A fairing element to fair an elongate object comprising:
a canal that accepts the elongate object and being profiled to reduce a hydrodynamic drag of the elongate object when the elongate object is at least partially immersed,
said fairing element comprising a leading edge and a trailing edge, said fairing element being pivot-mounted on the elongate object around a longitudinal axis of the canal,
said fairing element comprising a bearing edge comprising:
a first bearing edge which is mitered with respect to the leading edge, the first bearing edge being arranged such that a distance between the leading edge and the bearing edge, perpendicular to the leading edge, decreases continuously, along an axis parallel to the leading edge, from a first end of the first bearing edge to a second end of the bearing edge,
said fairing element a mitered fairing element, the mitered fairing element comprising:
a first part and a second part which are joined together along a first bearing edge so that the fairing element can pass from a deployed configuration in which the trailing edge is parallel to the leading edge to a folded configuration in which the fairing element is folded along the first bearing edge.
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14. A fairing comprising a plurality of fairing elements which fair an elongate element comprising a canal that accepts the elongate object and being profiled to reduce a hydrodynamic drag of the elongate object when the elongate object is at least partially immersed, and which are pivot-mounted on the elongate element around the longitudinal axis of the canal, in which at least one of the fairing elements is a mitered fairing element as claimed in
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18. A faired elongate element for being at least partially immersed, comprising an elongate element faired by means of the fairing as claimed in
19. A towing assembly comprising a faired elongate element as claimed in
20. The towing assembly as claimed in
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This application is a National Stage of International patent application PCT/EP2016/054151, filed on Feb. 26, 2016, which claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1500389, filed on Feb. 27, 2015, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The present invention relates to faired towing cables used on ships for towing a submersible body launched at sea and to the handling of these cables. It relates more particularly to towing cables which are faired using scales or portions articulated to one another. It also applies to any type of faired elongate element that may operate at least partially submerged in water.
The context of the invention is that of a naval vessel or ship intended to tow a submersible object such as a variable-immersion sonar incorporated into a towed body. In such a context, in the non-operational phase, the submersible body is stored on board the ship and the cable is wound around the drum of a winch used for winding in and paying out the cable, namely for deploying and recovering the cable. Conversely, in the operational phase, the submersible body is submerged behind the ship and towed by the ship using the cable, of which the end connected to the submersible body is immersed. The cable is wound in/paid out by the winch through a cable guiding device that allows the cable to be guided.
In order to obtain a high degree of immersion at high towing speeds, the towing cable is faired to reduce its hydrodynamic drag and to reduce the vibrations caused by the hydrodynamic flow around the cable. The cable is covered with a segmented fairing made up of rigid fairing elements having shapes intended to reduce the hydrodynamic drag of the cable. The purpose of the sheath made up of the fairing elements is to reduce the wake turbulence produced by the movement of the cable through the water, when the cable is immersed in the water and towed by the ship. For great immersion depths that go hand-in-hand with high towing speeds of at least 20 knots, the fairing elements need to be rigid. Flexible fairings are of benefit only for economically profiling chains or cables for buoys subjected to marine currents or, at worst, towed at speeds of 6 to 8 knots. In the case of the use of rigid fairing elements, segmenting the fairing into fairing elements is necessary so that the cable can pass through guide elements of the pulley type, and so that lateral cable deflection can be tolerated in case the ship changes heading and also so as to be able to be wound onto the drum of a winch.
In the normal operating state, the fairing elements are mounted with the ability to rotate about the longitudinal axis of the cable. This is because it is necessary for the fairing elements to rotate freely about the cable so as to be correctly oriented with respect to the stream lines of the water. However, each fairing element is connected to its two neighbors axially and in terms of rotation about the cable to pivot with respect to these about an axis parallel to the axis x by a maximum angle that is small, of the order of a few degrees. This link between the fairing elements in particular allows the fairing as a whole to pass fluidly through all the guide elements. As a result, the rotation of one of one fairing element leads to a rotation of its neighbors and so on and so forth through the entire set of fairing elements. Thus, both when the cable is deployed in the water and when it is wound around the drum, any change in orientation of one of the fairing elements has a knock-on effect on all of the fairing elements fairing the cable. Thus, when the cable is deployed at sea, the fairing elements naturally orientate themselves in the direction of the current generated by the movement of the vessel. Likewise, the guide device is conventionally configured to orientate and guide the fairing elements that pass through the guide device that these exhibit a predefined orientation with respect to the drum of the winch, all the fairing elements, as the cable is raised, adopting one and the same orientation relative to the drum, which orientation allows the cable to be wound in keeping the scales parallel to one another turn by turn.
Now, the applicant company has found that, when the faired cable is wound around the drum of a winch so as to recover the towed body, the fairing sometimes becomes severely damaged or even crushed as it passes through the guide devices, this being something which may render the entire sonar system unavailable. It may even happen that this damages the guide device. By way of example, certain variable-immersion sonar systems installed on certain ships and operated in the normal way by military crews encounter fairing-element-crushing problems approximately once a year and sometimes far more frequently. This crushing may have limited consequences but may also degenerate or jam the winch or damage it, and thus cause the entire towing system and therefore the sonar to become unavailable.
It is one object of the present invention to limit the risks of damage to the fairing of a towed cable.
To this end, the applicant company has first of all, in the context of the present invention, identified and studied the cause of this problem of the fairing elements becoming crushed by observing the faired cable in an operational situation and by modeling the faired cable in an operational situation and by modeling the various forces acting on it, notably the hydrodynamic and aerodynamic flows, and the force of gravity.
During the operational phase, the faired cable is towed by the ship and has one end immersed. Very often, the tow point is a point on a pulley which is situated a certain height above the water. What is meant by the tow point of a cable or of a fairing is the position of the point at which the cable bears against a device on board the ship, which is closest to the immersed end of the cable or respectively of the fairing. As the ship moves forward, under the action of drag the cable moves away from the transom to disappear beneath the water a little further afield than a point vertically below the tow point. The length of faired cable that is airborne is increased in comparison with the simple height of towing above the waterline because the cable is inclined with respect to the vertical. It is found that the last fairing element still engaged with the ship, namely the fairing element which is at the tow point, often resting on the pulley or resting on a guiding device on board the ship, is oriented correctly in the direction of the flow even though it is considerably higher up in the air (leading edge facing into the flow and trailing edge trailing). The first fairing element in the water (namely the fairing element that is just immersed) is assumed to adopt a correct orientation in the flow stemming from the speed of the ship (leading edge facing into the flow and trailing edge trailing). However, between these two remarkable fairing elements, the string of fairing may twist because, in the air, it is subjected only to vibration, to an insignificant flow of air and to the effect of gravity. Under the effect of the influences of the sea, of the towing conditions and of the waves, situations whereby this airborne string twists are regularly observed. The first cause of twisting is the effect of gravity as soon as the cable moves away from the vertical, something which it has to do as soon as the towing speed becomes sufficient. Under the effect of gravity, the string of fairing between the tow point and the sea will twist to one side (in the air) and then straighten up (in the water). This is the nominal situation of the string of fairing. This twist is dependent on the intrinsic stiffness of the string of fairing and also on the length airborne. A situation in which the airborne part of the fairing 2 is a little twisted, namely experiences torsion about the axis of the cable, is depicted in
Occasionally, depending on the sea conditions, with green seas or waves breaking more or less over the transom of the ship, the airborne part of the cable temporarily experiences flow in the opposite direction to that prevailing lower down and which corresponds to the speed of forward travel of the ship. These packets of water are perfectly capable of twisting the string of fairing still further and of placing it in opposition with the position expected in the normal towing stream. When that happens, the fairing is twisted and makes a half-turn about the cable in its airborne part. That means that two fairing elements of the airborne part of the string of fairing have trailing edges that between them form an angle of 180 degrees around the cable. The part of the fairing situated between these two fairing elements is twisted or in torsion. Starting out from this situation, it may happen that these parts of fairings which are therefore the wrong way round with respect to the mean stream imposed by the speed of the ship then suddenly find themselves immersed in this mean stream again (because of the movements of the ship that of the waves, etc.) so the part of the fairing that is the wrong way around is therefore urged to return to the right direction (the direction associated with the normal mean stream). It may then:
The configuration in which the fairing undergoes a double twist is stable but highly degraded and carries a high risk of subsequently introducing a great deal of disturbance into the entire system.
The applicant company has discovered that when a fairing experiences a complete double twist, under certain conditions, the fairing will become very much deteriorated in the water and this deteriorated part will cause a great deal of damage to the faired cable or even to the entirety of the faired system as the cable is being wound in and, more specifically, as it passes through the cable guiding device.
By analyzing the complete double twist, the applicant company has found that the submerged twist can be considered to be “caught” on the cable. In other words, the position of the submerged twist is fixed with respect to the cable along the axis of the cable. By contrast, its airborne counterpart, the airborne twist, remains situated at the same point between the tow point R and the water surface S. It is not fixed with respect to the cable along the axis of the cable but fixed with respect to the water surface S or to the tow point. When the cable is hauled in or lowered, the fairing elements experiencing the submerged twist follow the movement of the cable which is being hauled in or lowered, while the airborne twist remains fixed with respect to the water surface. From this it follows that a paying-out of the cable causes the submerged twist to sink to a greater depth while the airborne twist remains in the same place with respect to the water surface (so the 2 twists move further apart).
It is then necessary to examine what happens for a twist of one turn that is immersed and towed in that state. This twist which deploys over a small height forces the fairing elements to travel backwards or across the stream. The action of the stream on these fairing elements is therefore very great (proportional to the surface area, angle, density of the water and the square of the speed) and this action manifests itself in the form of powerful torsional moments which tend to force the fairing elements to align in the stream but they come up against the stiffness of the turn of twist which therefore increases. What happens then is that a balance is struck and that the one-turn twist finds itself very much restricted in height and the fairing experiences violent loadings which will tighten the submerged twist under the effect of the towing speed. In other words, the full turn of the fairing about the cable will take place over an ever-shortening distance. Observations at sea have shown that the string of fairing could effect one full turn around the cable over a length of under 50 cm. During towing, the hydrodynamic stream applies a very high torque to the incorrectly oriented fairing elements which may go so far as to damage the fairing or even as to completely break the fairing elements.
When a submerged twist is hauled in, the fairing has been very highly stressed for a long time and retains the memory of its deformation (namely of its twisting), and the submerged twist comes out of the water still very tightly twisted during hauling and does not disappear during the hauling. This is referred to as remnant twist. Depending on the length of time for which the fairing has been exposed to this submerged twist and towed, the submerged twist may be able to become permanent or very slow to be reabsorbed, making it completely unable, for a fairly long period of time, to engage in the cable guide device even though the continuity of the fairing is unbroken. On the airborne twist side there is no damage, although there is a twist applied it is not at any time capable of damaging the cable.
When the still very tightly twisted submerged twist then arrives at the guide device, for example the pulley, the fairing elements affected by this submerged twist are unable to position themselves correctly in the guide device, notably in the pulley, and they jam in the guide device. If that happens, then the entire string of fairing that enters the guide device afterwards will be methodically destroyed if hauling is continued because each fairing element will, in sequence, follow the orientation of the one before it. This situation may even cause the guide device to break.
The invention proposes to limit the risks of damage to the cable fairing.
To this end, one subject of the invention is a fairing element intended to fair an element comprising a canal intended to accept the elongate object and being profiled to reduce the hydrodynamic drag of the elongate object when the elongate object is at least partially immersed, said fairing element comprising a leading edge and a trailing edge, said fairing element pivot-mounted on the elongate element around the longitudinal axis of the canal, said fairing element comprising a bearing edge comprising a first bearing edge which is mitered with respect to the leading edge, the first bearing edge being arranged in such a way that the distance between the leading edge and the bearing edge, perpendicular to the leading edge, decreases continuously, along an axis parallel to the leading edge, from a first end of the first bearing edge to a second end of the bearing edge, said fairing element being a mitered fairing element.
Advantageously, the mitered fairing element comprises a first part and a second part which are joined together along a first bearing edge so that the fairing element can pass from a deployed configuration in which the trailing edge is parallel to the leading edge to a folded configuration in which the mitered fairing element is folded along the first bearing edge.
Advantageously, said mitered fairing element being configured so as to pass from the deployed configuration into the folded configuration when a torque inducing relative pivoting between the two parts, applied about an axis comprised in the first bearing edge and parallel to the longitudinal axis of the first bearing edge, exceeds a predetermined threshold.
Advantageously, the threshold is higher than a nominal torque to be exerted by a hydrodynamic stream of water on the fairing element when the fairing element is immersed.
The cross section of the mitered fairing element may be constant or variable along the leading edge.
The two parts may arranged back to back along the first bearing edge.
The mitered fairing element is advantageously configured to pass reversibly from the deployed configuration to the folded configuration.
According to a first embodiment, the first part and the second part arranged back to back along the first bearing edge and the first part has a stiffness greater than that of the second part so that the fairing element passes from the deployed configuration into the folded configuration by folding of the second part.
Advantageously, the second part is made from a homogenous material.
According to a second embodiment, the first part and the second part are connected by a pivot connection. The fairing element may comprise a stabilizing device configured to keep the two parts in the deployed relative position when the relative pivoting torque is less than or equal to the threshold and so as to allow the two parts to rotate relative to one another so that they pass into the relative position of folding around the first bearing edge when the torque exceeds the threshold.
As an alternative, the first bearing edge is a flexible hinge zone connecting the two parts and having a stiffness lower than the stiffness of each of the two parts so that the fairing element passes from the deployed configuration to the folded configuration by bending of the flexible hinge zone.
Advantageously, the bearing edge is arranged in such a way that the distance between the bearing edge and the leading edge decreases continuously, along an axis parallel to the leading edge, from the first end of the first bearing edge to a first lateral face of the fairing element closer to the second to the first bearing edge than to the first end of the bearing edge.
The invention also relates to a fairing comprising a plurality of fairing elements which are intended to fair an elongate element comprising a canal intended to accept the elongate object and being profiled to reduce the hydrodynamic drag of the elongate object when the elongate object is at least partially immersed, and which are pivot-mounted on the elongate element around the longitudinal axis of the canal, in which at least one of the fairing elements is a mitered fairing element according to the invention.
Advantageously, the fairing comprises at least one fairing portion comprising a plurality of fairing elements joined together along the axis of the canal and articulated to one another, said portion comprising at least one end fairing element, adjacent to one single other fairing element belonging to said portion, being a mitered fairing element so that it has having a bearing edge comprising a first bearing edge which is mitered with respect to the leading edge, the first bearing edge being arranged in such a way that the distance between the leading edge and the first bearing edge, perpendicular to the leading edge, decreases continuously, along an axis parallel to the leading edge, from a first end of the first bearing edge to a second end of the first bearing edge, further away from the other fairing element than the first end, along the axis parallel to the leading edge.
Advantageously, each mitered fairing element is an end fairing element.
Advantageously, the mitered fairing element is sized to be more resistant to a pressure loading, applied in a direction perpendicular to the leading edge and connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge, than the other fairing elements.
The invention also relates to a faired elongate element that may be operated at least partially immersed, comprising an elongate element faired by means of the fairing according to the invention, the elongate element being received in the canal, said fairing elements being pivot-mounted on the elongate element about the longitudinal axis of the canal and being translationally immobilized with respect to the elongate element along the axis of the elongate element.
The invention also relates to a towing assembly comprising a faired elongate element according to the invention and a towing and handling device intended to tow the faired elongate element while the latter is partially immersed, the towing device comprising a winch allowing the faired elongate element to be wound in and paid out through a guide device that allows the elongate element to be guided, the guide device comprising a first groove the bottom of which is formed by the bottom of the groove of a pulley, the first groove being delimited by a first surface having a profile that is concave in a radial plane of the pulley, the width of the first groove and the curvature of the profile of the first curved surface in the radial plane being determined to allow the fairing element, under the effect of the rotation of the fairing element about the axis of the elongate element x under the effect of the traction of the elongate element with respect to the guide device along the longitudinal axis thereof, to flip from a turned-over position in which the fairing element is oriented with its trailing edge toward the bottom of the first groove into an acceptable position in which it is oriented with the leading edge toward the bottom of the first groove.
Advantageously, the mitered fairing element is configured to fold along the first bearing edge as it flips from the turned-over position into the acceptable position.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the detailed description which follows, given by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the appended drawings in which:
From one figure to another, the same elements bear the same references.
The invention relates to a fairing intended to cover an elongate object, for example a flexible object such as a cable, or a rigid object such as an offshore drill string, that may be operated at least partially immersed. The elongate element may be conventionally towed by a floating vessel. The fairing is intended to reduce the forces generated by the current on this elongate element when it is immersed in the water and towed through the water by a naval vessel.
Another subject of the invention is a towing assembly as depicted in
The cable 1 tows a towed body 101, for example comprising one or more sonar antennas. The towed body 101 is mechanically anchored to the cable 1 in an appropriate manner. The towed body 101 is put into and removed from the water by means of a winch 5 arranged on a deck 103 of the ship 100.
The towing assembly according to the invention also comprises a device for towing and handling the faired cable, comprising:
The guide device 4 is advantageously mounted on a bearing structure 7 and may be fixed to the ship and which may or may not be capable of pivoting.
The guide device provides guidance for the cable 1, which means to say is able to limit the lateral deviation of the cable with respect to the winch in a direction parallel to the axis of rotation of the drum of the winch. It is also advantageously configured to modify the direction of the cable between its end 6 that may be immersed and the winch 5 in a plane substantially perpendicular to the axis of the winch while at the same time making it possible to safeguard the radius of curvature of the cable so that it does not drop below a certain threshold in this plane.
In the nonlimiting example depicted in
The fairing elements are advantageously rigid. What is meant in the present patent application by fairing elements that are rigid is that the fairing elements are configured in such a way that they do not deform substantially under the effect of the hydrodynamic stream when immersed and possibly towed in the direction of the leading edge. In other words, the fairing elements maintain substantially the same shape when subjected to the hydrodynamic stream. The fairing elements may potentially deform under the effect of forces stronger than those developed by the hydrodynamic stream. They are, for example, made of hard plastics material such as, for example, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or polyoxymethylene (POM).
Each fairing element 13, 13a has a hydrodynamic profile, of the kind depicted in
In
The fairing elements 13 may be mounted on the cable 1 to pivot about the longitudinal axis of the cable 1, namely about the longitudinal axis of the canal 16.
The fairing elements 13 belonging to one and the same portion of fairing 12a or 12b are joined together by means of a coupling device 20 that allows relative rotation of said fairing elements 13 with respect to one another about the cable 1. The coupling device 20 joins the fairing elements together both axially, namely along the towing cable, and also in terms of rotation about the cable 1. The coupling device 20 allows relative rotation of the fairing elements with respect to one another about the axis of the cable, namely of the canal 16. This excursion is permitted either freely with a stop. The rotation of one fairing element about the cable therefore does not cause the adjacent fairing element to turn. The excursion may be achieved in a constrained manner, with more or less strong return toward the aligned position (position of no relative rotation of the fairing elements relative to one another about the cable). In the latter instance, rotation of one fairing element about the cable causes the adjacent fairing elements of the same portion to rotate about the cable. Advantageously, the clearance between adjacent fairing elements is near zero, which means that any relative rotation of the fairing elements leads to elastic deformation of the coupling device. That allows the fairing elements of one and the same portion to adopt an orientation with respect to the cable that allows it to offer the least resistance to the current brought about by the movement of the cable through the water. The coupling device allows this relative rotation with a maximum amplitude, namely a maximum angular excursion. Thus, the rotation of one fairing element causes the neighboring fairing elements and, through a knock-on effect, all of the fairing elements of the same portion 12a or 12b to rotate. As the cable is raised, all the fairing elements of one and the same portion adopt one and the same orientation relative to the drum thereby allowing the cable to be wound in keeping the scales parallel to one another turn by turn.
Advantageously, the coupling device 20 allows the relative rotation of the fairing elements with respect to one another to allow the cable to be wound around a winch, the lateral excursion of the cable being caused, for example, by changes in heading of the ship. The coupling device allows these movements of relative rotation of these fairing elements with respect to one another with maximum respective angular excursions. The coupling device 20 depicted in
When there is torsion in a portion of fairing, there is deformation in the portion of fairing. This deformation is obtained through elastic deformation of the coupling device 20 and/or of the fairing elements so that the portion of the fairing opposes the torsion because of its torsional stiffness. In other words, the fairing applies a return torque in the opposite direction to the torsional torque applied to the fairing in order to generate the twist. These elastic deformations are torsions. When the fairing comprises individual coupling devices 19, the individual coupling devices 19 deform elastically as the fairing is twisted. Conventionally, the fairing elements have a stiffness such that they too deform elastically when the fairing is twisted. These elastic deformations are torsions.
Advantageously, the fairing elements 13 are immobilized translationally with respect to the cable 1 along the axis of the cable x. That makes it possible to prevent the fairing elements 13 from becoming squashed together or spread out along the cable 1, either of which could have the effect of causing the fairing 11 to jam during the winding-up of the faired cable around the drum of the winch 5 or even when passing through the guide device 4. For this purpose, each portion of fairing 12a, 12b comprises an immobilizing device 21 collaborating with a fairing element 13a of said portion 12a, 12b and intended to collaborate with the cable 1 so as to immobilize the fairing element 13a translationally along the axis of the cable. According to the embodiment of
According to the invention, the fairing portions 12a, 12b are free to rotate relative to one another about the axis of the canal 16, namely about the axis of the cable 1 when they are mounted on the cable 1. In other words, the fairing elements 13 belonging to two distinct portions of fairing 12a, 12b are free to rotate relative to one another about the axis of the canal, namely about the cable 1. Each portion 12a, 12b is relatively flexible in terms of rotation about the cable even if a certain torsional stiffness is observed. This flexibility only amplifies with deployed length. For this reason, breaking the fairing down into fairing portions which are free to rotate relative to one another makes it possible to limit the risks of the formation of double twists and therefore to limit the risk of damage to the fairing, because the twists in the portions of fairing are not transmitted from one portion to another. The fairing may be installed all along the cable. In other words, the fairing extends over the entire length of the cable. As an alternative, the fairing extends along the cable over a length less than the length of the cable.
The fairing may fair an elongate element. It is also towed by means of a towing device as described in the present patent application.
The heights h of the respective fairing portions, namely their lengths along the axis x of the cable, are less than a maximum height hmax. As an alternative, at least one of the portions has a height less than this maximum height hmax. In
A portion of fairing T experiencing a twist by an angle θ about the axis x of a cable (or of the canal 16) is subjected to a torque C applied about the axis x of the cable 1. The torque C that makes it possible to obtain this torsion angle is given by the following formula:
The maximum height hmax is dependent on the stiffness of the portions of fairing. The higher the torsional stiffness of the portions of fairing about the axis of the cable, the greater the height they may have. The longer the chord of the fairing, the more affected the portion of fairing will be by the influences of the sea and the towing conditions, and the lower the maximum height of the portions of fairing will be. The torsional disturbances generated by the influences of the sea and the towing conditions are proportional to the surface area of the fairing elements of the portion (and therefore to the chord length) and to the lever arm (and therefore to the chord length of the fairing). The maximum height hmax is therefore given by the following formula:
where F is a constant calculated according to a configuration identified as being the most influential and which takes account of the flow and reflow of the wake and LC is the chord length of the fairing elements of the portion of fairing.
The constant F is comprised between 250 and 500. F is dependent on the maximum speed at which the cable is to be towed. If the cable is to be towed at a speed of 20 knots, F is fixed at 400. F is lower if the maximum speed decreases.
Typically, for fairings with an angular torsional stiffness k of the order of 4 to 5 Nm2/rad, and a chord length LC of 0.125 m, the maximum height is of the order of 2 m if the constant is fixed at 400.
The fairing according to the invention offers advantages even when there is no desire to wind the cable around a winch. Specifically, the fact that the fairing according to the invention minimizes the risks of the formation of double twists means that the risks of fairing damage associated with the aging of the immersed twists can be limited without these entering a guide device. The fairing according to the invention therefore limits the requirements in terms of cable maintenance.
Advantageously, the guide device of the towing assembly according to the invention is configured to make it possible to modify the orientation of a fairing element of the fairing with respect to the guide device by rotation of the fairing element about the axis of the cable under the effect of the traction of the cable with respect to the guide device (along the axis of the cable), when the fairing element exhibits an orientation in which it is bearing on the guide device and in which the line of action of the force applied by the cable to the guide device extends substantially in the direction extending from the axis of the cable as far as the trailing edge of the fairing element.
Advantageously, the guide device is configured to turn a fairing element round from a turned-round position in which it is oriented tail down into an acceptable position in which it is oriented tail up. The orientations up and down are defined with respect to a vertical axis associated with the winch.
These configurations facilitate the winding of the faired cable onto the winch. Specifically, when it is desired to wind the cable around the drum of the winch, the first fairing element of each portion to leave the water rises up toward the guide device and, not being connected to the fairing elements of the preceding portion, turns over trailing edge downmost under the effect of gravity, taking with it the next fairing elements of that same portion of fairing. If the guide device does not allow such a turning-over, the fairing elements will arrive on the drum of the winch incorrectly oriented (it is preferable for the fairing elements to be wound up with their trailing edges uppermost in order to avoid damage to the fairing because the leading edge is stronger).
To this end, the guide device comprises a guide or a set of guides that allows the fairing element to be flipped or its orientation changed. This guide or set of guides may for example comprise a pulley and/or deflector or any other device allowing the orientation of the fairing elements about the axis of the cable to be altered. One nonlimiting example of this type is described in the French patent application published under the number FR2923452. These devices are conventionally arranged upstream or downstream of the pulley as seen from the winch. They are conventionally concave, which means to say of the type having a groove, so as to define a housing intended to accept the fairing element in order to flip it. These guides may be able to follow the cable if the cable deviates laterally parallel to the axis of the pulley (or of the winch), for example by being mounted with the ability to pivot about a substantially vertical axis.
Some towing pulleys are configured to cause the fairing elements to pass with the nose toward the bottom of the groove and the tail facing out of the groove. This arrangement is logical because the towing cable, through which the forces pass, has to be located in the nose of the fairing elements, namely near the leading edge. Some towing pulleys therefore have a narrow V-groove. On leaving the sea and arriving at the towing pulley, the fairing elements which, during their airborne path, have a tendency to orientate themselves with the trailing edge downmost (so upside down) thus find themselves straightened up by degrees thanks to the connections between the fairing elements. When a fairing element is correctly positioned in the groove of the pulley, during hauling-in (and also during paying-out) all the successive ones will become straightened by degrees and pass in the best way through the pulley.
Moreover, the devices that allow the fairing to be turned over (or straighteners) do not perform well when they are installed downstream of the pulley, when viewed from the free end of the cable, because the position of the cable at this point has at least two degrees of freedom: longitudinal and lateral, and present-day straightening devices are incapable of correctly following the cable in these two directions or are devices that are complicated.
In the case of a narrow V-groove pulley, if the guide device has no turning-over device downstream of the pulley as seen from the free end of the cable or if this device does not perform well, fairing elements entering the pulley tail-down may be able to jam in the groove and, if they are not engineered to withstand the force applied by the cable in this orientation, they will deform and cause the subsequent fairing elements to deform. This situation is depicted in
If the pulley P is a pulley of the prior art, the cross section of the pulley of the prior art in the plane M passing through the lateral edge 18 connecting the trailing edge BF and the leading edge BA of the head-end fairing element is as visible in
In order to alleviate these disadvantages, the invention seeks to give the pulley itself a function of turning the fairing elements over about the axis of the cable.
To this end, the invention consists in providing a towing assembly comprising a guide device for guiding the cable, which is positioned downstream of the winch when viewed from the end of the cable that may be immersed, the guide device comprising a first groove the bottom of which is formed by the bottom of the groove of a pulley, the first groove being configured to allow a fairing element of the fairing to be flipped, by rotation of the fairing element about the axis of the cable x under the effect of the tension in the cable, from a turned-over position in which the fairing element is oriented with its trailing edge (or tail) toward the bottom of the first groove, into an acceptable position in which it is oriented with its leading-edge (or nose) toward the bottom of the first groove, which means to say with its trailing edge toward the outside of the groove. The dimensions and the shape of the profile of the first groove, notably the width of the first groove and the curvature of the profile of the first curved surface (which will be defined later on) in the radial plane are determined as a function of the radius R of the pulley, of the maximum length CAR, measured parallel to the chord separating the trailing edge BF of the fairing elements of the fairing from the axis x of the elongate element 1, of the chord length LC of the fairing elements and of the maximum thickness E of the fairing elements so as to allow the fairing element to be flipped from the turned-over position into the acceptable position.
When the trailing edge (or tail) is oriented toward the bottom of the first groove, that means that the trailing edge (or the thin end of the tail) is situated a shorter distance than the leading edge (or than the nose) away from the axis of the pulley xp. The axis of the pulley is the axis about which the pulley pivots with respect to the winch, namely with respect to the fixed part of the winch. Advantageously, the axis of the pulley is substantially horizontal, namely intended to run parallel to the water surface when the sea state is calm when the towing device is fixed to a naval vessel or ship. The bottom 26 of the groove of the pulley forms a circle of radius R the center of which lies on the axis of the pulley.
The first groove 24 is delimited by a first surface of which the cross section in the radial plane BB is the first concave curve 25 (U-shaped curve depicted in bold in
According to the invention, the aperture of the V, αv, is at least equal to twice a threshold angle as, and the width of the V lv, measured along a straight line d parallel to the axis of the pulley, is at least equal to a threshold width ls, given by:
lid is an ideal width of the V,
In one preferred embodiment of the invention, the width of the V is at least equal to lid. The turnover is therefore accomplished more easily.
Advantageously, the limit angle αi is given by the following formula:
In the embodiment of
As a result, in order to ensure the desired turnover, the first concave curve 25 delimiting the first groove 24 may have the profile visible in
The first concave curve 25 is the curve delimiting the first groove 24 intended to receive the faired cable in a radial plane (see
αt=Arctan(Cf)
This feature makes it possible to prevent the fairing element from blocking the cable in the groove when the cable moves laterally in the groove, namely when it moves parallel to the axis of the pulley. What happens is that if this angular condition is respected, the fairing element can be sure of slipping in the event of lateral thrust from the cable. In other words, a pulley having a profile as defined with reference to
The concave first curve 25 and, therefore, the profile of the first groove, is obtained by those skilled in the art by simulations starting from this definition.
In practice, for an angle at of the order of 10°, a first curve forming a curved line having at every point a radius of curvature at least equal to half the chord length LC of the fairing element makes it possible to ensure that the fairing element will slip in the event of lateral thrust from the cable. A curved line is a line that has no sharp or salient angle (in the mathematical sense of the term). Specifically, if, as can be seen in
Advantageously, the dimensions and shape of the first groove profile are determined to allow the flipping of a reference fairing element of maximum length CAR, measured parallel to the chord separating the trailing edge BF of the fairing elements of the fairing, a fairing element chord length LC and a maximum thickness E, and possibly also as a function of the coefficient of friction Cf between the reference fairing element and the pulley. These dimensions and profile are advantageously defined to ensure that the fairing element flips from a turned-over position into an acceptable position between without deforming this reference fairing element.
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
The pulley, and more specifically the groove of the pulley, has a profile that is constant. In other words, it is the same in all the radial planes of the pulley.
The first curve 25 and the second curve 28 are symmetric with respect to a plane perpendicular to the axis xp of the pulley and comprising a radius of the pulley passing through the bottom 26. This plane is then the median plane of the groove.
The way in which the pulley profile according to the invention as depicted in
The angular feature is not enough to obtain correct overturning of the fairing elements. It is necessary for the width of the groove lgm, in the plane M, to be at least equal to a limit width li which is given by the following formula:
li=2(LC+E)*sin αi
Now, as can be seen in
The V previously defined is therefore to be corrected by the bias introduced by the angle β. The aperture αv of the V formed by the second curve 28 in the plane BB is at least equal to a threshold angle as. The threshold angle as is given by the following formula:
Therefore, the width of the V lv in the plane BB is at least equal to the ideal width lid given by the following formula:
lid=2(LC+E)*sin αs
The first curve 25 delimiting the first groove 24 has, at least from the first endpoint 33 to the second endpoint 34, a concave shape.
It may, at least from the first endpoint 33 as far as the second endpoint 34 have a V shape or alternatively exhibit several sharp or salient angles AS depicted in
Advantageously, as depicted in
When the first groove (or first curve) has a V-shaped cross section (V-shaped first curve) it needs to have a width at least equal to lid for turnover to be guaranteed. When the first groove (or first curve) has a cross section such that the first curve is U-shaped, then it can have a smaller width potentially down to 0.7*lid, because it has no sharp angles in which the tail of the fairing element may jam. In that case, the aperture of the V may also be below the threshold angle. In other words, the V needs to have a width at least equal to 0.7*lid. By contrast, overturning may prove more difficult than when the V has a width at least equal to lid. Below this threshold, there is no certainty that overturning will occur.
Advantageously, in the case of a first groove having a U-shaped profile, the first groove has a bathtub-shaped bottom. The groove with a bathtub-shaped bottom offers the advantage of ensuring certain and fluid reorientation of the fairing element and allows the fairing element to be oriented in a substantially lying-down position in the bottom of the groove.
That means that the first curve has a central zone, this central zone has a width equal to g*lid, where lid is the ideal width and g is comprised between 0.7 and 1, between the endpoints coinciding with the endpoints of a V-shaped reference curve 128 having a width equal to g*lid. The central zone is delimited by the two curves (see hatched zone) 10:
The central zone may be one of the two curves. The lower curve is the preferred embodiment of the invention.
Advantageously, the central zone of the first curve is formed by a pulley having a groove the width of which is the width of the central zone.
Advantageously, the first curve comprises upper parts extending substantially perpendicularly above the endpoints of the V so as to prevent the cable from leaving the first groove in the event of a vertical movement of the cable. These cheeks are secured to the pulley or belong to the pulley or are fixed with respect to the axis of the pulley.
The first curves comprised between the upper curve and the lower curve offer the advantage of satisfying the angle condition making it possible to prevent the fairing element from inhibiting the lateral movement of the cable.
To sum up, the pulley according to the invention and, more generally, the guide device according to the invention, makes it possible to ensure the straightening of a fairing element coming to bear against the pulley with an orientation in which the trailing edge faces toward the bottom of the groove of the pulley and the leading edge is vertically aligned with the trailing edge. The fairing element carries along with it the fairing elements to which it is connected in rotation about the cable, namely the fairing elements of the same portion. The pulley according to the invention also allows the straightening of the fairing elements of a cable organized into a single portion in which the fairing elements are all joined together in rotation about the cable if an inter-fairing-element connection should break for example under the effect of a double twist, thereby allowing the faired cable to pass through the pulley without deformation of the fairing elements. It also allows the straightening of the head-end fairing element of a fairing comprising a single portion extending over a length shorter than the length of the cable starting from the end that may be immersed. It also allows the straightening of the fairing elements of a faired cable comprising fairing elements which are all free to rotate about the cable independently of one another. It furthermore, because of its width, allows guidance of a cable organized into a single portion exhibiting remnant twist (very tightly twisted immersed torsion not reabsorbed on passing through the pulley) without deformation of the fairing elements, something that is not possible using a narrow V-shaped pulley.
The guide device of the invention is simple and effective because it does not require the fitting of a cable-follower device (namely a device able to follow the cable as it moves laterally and vertically with respect to the pulley).
The pulley according to the invention, and, more generally, the guide device according to the invention, because of its profile, does not turn the fairing element over as far as a situation in which the trailing edge is situated in vertical alignment with the leading edge. For example, in the case of the pulley with a bathtub-shaped bottom, the fairing element is turned over into a position in which it is substantially flat (with the trailing edge raised slightly upwards). It therefore needs to pivot by approximately ¼ of a turn as opposed to ½ of a turn (if it were to have to adopt the position in which the trailing edge was above and in vertical alignment with the leading edge) thereby facilitating the operation whereby the pulley straightens the fairing element.
Advantageously, the guide device comprises, between the winch and the pulley, a straightening device allowing the fairing elements leaving the pulley and heading for the winch to be oriented about the axis of the cable in such a way that they exhibit a predetermined orientation with respect to the drum of the winch, for example with the leading edge downmost and the trailing edge vertically in line with the leading edge. These devices are truly effective only when the position of the cable is perfectly known (which it is as it leaves the pulley).
In the embodiment of
The trailing edge BF constitutes a bearing edge parallel to the leading edge BA.
As an alternative, as visible in
The bearing edge BAPa extends longitudinally between two ends E1 and E2. The bearing edge BAPa is arranged in such a way that the distance between the bearing edge BAPa and the leading edge BAa decreases continuously, from a first end E1 of the first bearing edge Bza to a first lateral face 180 of the fairing element closer to the second to the first bearing edge Bza than to the first end of the bearing edge, along an axis parallel to the leading edge BA.
In the embodiment of
This embodiment also offers an advantage in the case of a pulley of constant profile, and more particularly a pulley according to the invention. Specifically, the point of contact P′ is situated in a plane M′ situated at a shorter distance D′ than the distance D at which the plane M (comprising the point P) is situated, with respect to the axis of the pulley, parallel to the axis of the cable x. As a result, the groove of the pulley is not as deep in the plane M′ as in the plane M. Specifically, the profile of the groove in the plane M (or M′) is the projection of the profile of the groove in a radial plane passing through the plane P (or respectively P′) onto the plane M (or, respectively, M′) forming an angle β (or respectively β′ less than β) with the radial plane at the point considered. Now, the fact that the groove is not as deep in the plane M′ as it is in the plane M means that the pulley is flatter in the plane M than in the plane M′, at least at the bottom (namely at the level of the central part of the curve delimiting the groove). If the fairing element comes into contact with the central portion of the pulley in the bottom of the bathtub, the central portion is flatter in the plane M′ than in the plane M, or in other words, the radius of the contact surface at the point P is greater in the plane M′ than in the plane M, making it easier for the fairing element to flip under the effect of the traction of the cable with respect to the axis of the pulley.
In the embodiment of
As an alternative, the mitered fairing element is the fairing element at the tail-end of the portion, namely the fairing element closest to the end of the cable that may be immersed. That makes it possible to facilitate the flipping of the fairing element during the paying-out of the cable (when the fairing element comes to bear on the pulley on the other side of the pulley with respect to the axis of the pulley) and to facilitate the flipping of the entire portion because the fairing element (by a propagation of the rotational movement over the entire portion). The tail-end fairing element is a fairing element which is adjacent to just one other fairing element belonging to the same portion. The first bearing edge is arranged in such a way that the distance between the leading edge BAa and the first mitered bearing edge decreases, along the leading edge BAa, from a first end of the first bearing edge facing the other fairing element to a second of the first bearing edge further away from the other fairing element, along the axis parallel to BAa. The other end of the first bearing edge is closer to a lateral face than the first end of the bearing edge. This embodiment, like the preceding one, makes it possible to ensure the flipping of all the fairing elements of the portions of fairing without having to provide only mitered fairing elements over the entire fairing, as so doing would have the effect of limiting the performance of the fairing in terms of drag reduction.
Advantageously, each portion comprises at least one (head or tail) end fairing element comprising a mitered edge. The other fairing elements are not mitered fairing elements. They do not have a mitered first bearing edge. The bearing edge is the trailing edge and is substantially parallel to the leading edge over its entire length.
In an alternative form, a fairing comprising a single portion as defined above may comprise a fairing element with a mitered bearing edge. This portion extends for example over a length less than the length of the cable starting from the end that may be immersed. In this case, the head-end fairing element of the portion is advantageously a fairing element comprising a mitered bearing edge designed as for the head-end fairing element described hereinabove.
In another alternative form, the portion extends over the entire length of the cable.
In all the configurations of fairing (of the type comprising one portion, several portions or comprising fairing elements which are all free to rotate independently of one another about the elongate element), all the fairing elements could be mitered fairing elements. That would make it easier to flip each fairing element in the event of a breakage of an inter-fairing-element connection downstream of the fairing element as seen from the pulley, when the fairing elements are initially connected. In cases where the fairing elements are free to rotate independently of one another, that would make it easier to flip each fairing element as it arrives on a guide device. More generally, the mitered fairing element makes it possible to avoid the need to join the fairing elements together and therefore makes it possible to limit the cost of the fairing and the time taken to assemble the fairing.
If there is a wish to reorient the fairing elements when the cable is being wound in, the miter is produced in such a way that the distance between the leading edge BA and the first mitered bearing edge decreases, along the axis xc, from the end of the first bearing edge closest to the end of the cable may be immersed as far as the end of the bearing edge opposite to the end of the cable that may be immersed and vice versa if the wish is to facilitate the flipping during the paying-out of the cable.
In the embodiment of
As visible in
As an alternative, the first portion of the leading edge Bza1 is connected to the lateral faces by respective bulging surfaces. What is meant by bulging surfaces is surfaces with convex curvature. This embodiment also makes it possible to limit the thickness of the bearing edge. As an alternative, the curved surfaces extend over the entire length of the first bearing edge. The chamfers and curved surfaces are two nonlimiting technical solutions that make it possible to obtain the feature whereby at least a first portion of the first bearing edge Bza1 has a thickness less than the thickness e1 of the fairing element in any longitudinal plane parallel to the leading edge and perpendicular to the lateral faces of the fairing element intersecting the first portion of the first bearing edge Bza1. The thickness of the fairing element in a plane of section is the distance separating the first longitudinal face 122 from the second longitudinal face 123 in a direction perpendicular to the chord CO in the plane of section of the fairing element. Advantageously, the first portion Bza1 has the same thickness as the second bearing edge Bla which runs parallel to the axis x and is situated a fixed distance away from the leading edge along the axis x.
A bearing edge of a fairing element according to a second embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to
In a second embodiment one example of which is depicted in
Advantageously, the fairing element is configured so as to be foldable reversibly about the first bearing edge Bzb. The fairing element reverts naturally from the deployed configuration to the folded configuration when the torque returns to the threshold value or to a value below the threshold. Advantageously, the fairing element is configured to be folded reversibly when it passes from the overturned position (trailing edge downward) to the acceptable position on the pulley. These advantages are obtained for example obtained the choice of the materials for the fairing element, their shape, their arrangement, their dimensions.
In
The first part 231 extends for example on one side of the first bearing edge and is delimited by the first bearing edge Bzb, the second bearing edge (if there is one) Blb, the leading edge BA, one lateral face 280 and the portion of the other lateral face 270 extending between the leading edge BA and the first bearing edge Bzb.
The second part 232 is for example delimited by the first bearing edge Bzb, the part of the first lateral face 270 extending from Bzb as far as the trailing edge BF and the part of the trailing edge BF situated between Bzb and the first lateral face 270. In other words, the first part is the part that comprises the leading edge BA and the second part is the other part.
In the particular example of
The second part may, for example, be made of polyurethane. The first part may be made of a polyurethane with a rigidity higher than that of the material of the second part or alternatively may be made of POM or of PET.
Advantageously, the second part is made from a homogenous material. This then gives rise to progressive folding of the second part along a main fold line which starts at the junction between the lateral face 270 and the trailing edge BF and which continuously moves closer to the first bearing edge Bzb as the fairing element advances in the groove of the pulley, the folding always continuing as far as the first bearing edge as depicted in
In an alternative form of the second embodiment, depicted in
In one particular alternative form, the fairing element comprises a stabilizing device DS configured to keep the two parts in the deployed relative position when the relative pivoting torque is less than or equal to the threshold and so as to allow the two parts to rotate relative to one another so that they pass into the relative position of folding around the first bearing edge when the torque exceeds the threshold. The stabilizing device for example comprises a deliberate weak link or a compression spring. What is meant by a deliberate weak link is a mechanical contrivance configured to release the pivot connection about the first bearing edge when the torque exceeds the threshold.
As an alternative, the pivot connection is free.
In another alternative form, the bearing edge is a flexible hinge zone connecting the two parts. The stiffness of the hinge zone is less than the stiffness of each of the two parts so that the fairing element passes from the deployed configuration into the folded configuration by the folding of the flexible hinge zone. Advantageously, the folding is achieved by elastic deformation of the flexible hinge zone. Advantageously, the hinge zone is configured to pass from the unfolded configuration into the folded configuration when the torque exceeds the predetermined threshold. The flexible hinge zone for example forms a pivot connection.
The hinge zone may be made from one and the same homogenous material as the two parts but thinned in relation to the two parts so as to exhibit lower stiffness. As an alternative, the hinge zone is made from a material that has a rigidity lower than that of material from which each of the two parts is formed and is fixed to each of the two parts. The two parts may be made from one and the same material or from different materials.
In the alternative form depicted in
Advantageously, at least one mitered fairing element or each mitered fairing element is dimensioned so as to be better able to withstand a pressure load applied, in a direction perpendicular to the leading edge and parallel to an axis connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge, than the other fairing elements of the portion considered (which are not mitered) or alternatively, and more generally, than the non-mitered other fairing elements. This feature makes it possible to limit the risks of deformation and breakage of the fairing elements as they enter the guide device, turn over, and pass through this guide device. To this end, this fairing element is, for example, made from a harder material than the other fairing elements and/or comprises ribs providing this additional reinforcement. Advantageously, the fairing comprises at least one reinforced mitered end fairing element collaborating with the immobilizing device. That makes it possible to reduce the cost and possibly the weight of the fairing because only one the mitered fairing element or elements differs or differ from the others, all the others being identical.
The invention also relates to an assembly comprising a ship, the towing assembly being carried on board the ship. The ship is intended to move at a nominal speed in a nominal sea state. The towing assembly is installed on the ship in such a way that the tow point is situated at a nominal height.
Warnan, François, Jourdan, Michaël, Jezequel, Olivier
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